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Is Singapore landing visa?

No, visa on arrival means that the applicant does not directly obtain visas from other countries from the host country, but arrives at the port of the country with his passport and the entry permit issued by the relevant authorities of the country, and then issues the visa. Visa on arrival is usually unilateral.

At present, Singapore does not implement visa-on-arrival policy for most countries in the world, and only a few western countries enjoy the privilege of visa-on-arrival

In addition, China citizens with valid visas from Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States can apply for visas to arrive in Singapore, but the visa time is relatively short.

Singapore implements the anti-signing system.

Anti-visa certificate generally refers to the certificate issued by the immigration authorities or exit-entry administration authorities of the country (region) where the applicant goes to agree to issue a visa to the applicant. After holding this anti-visa certificate, you must generally apply for a visa at the country's embassy or consulate abroad. Some countries stipulate that applicants who hold such anti-visa documents must hold their valid passports at the same time, and then apply for a formal visa after arriving at the port of that country.

The countersignature is to mail a copy of your passport and related materials (such as a copy of your ID card and relevant notarial certificate) to the agent who goes to that country (region), and then the agent applies to the immigration bureau or the exit-entry administration of that country for the anti-visa certificate and sends it to me. Only after this anti-visa certificate, you need to apply for a visa at the foreign embassy or consulate of that country.

Legal basis: Article 1 of "Notes on Entry and Residence in Singapore" issued by the Consul of China Embassy in Singapore requires China citizens who hold ordinary passports for personal reasons to apply for entry visas in advance. China citizens who hold diplomatic passports and official passports (including ordinary official passports) and stay in Singapore for no more than 30 days are exempt from visas; If you stay for more than 30 days, or for the purpose of work, study or any profit-making activities, you should apply for a visa or relevant permission according to the regulations of the competent authorities of the Singapore government.

China passport holders do not enjoy the 96-hour visa-free transit policy. If you take a low-cost airline flight and transfer through Singapore Changi Airport (including transferring to the same low-cost airline flight), you must obtain an entry visa to Singapore in advance.